Archive for August 29th, 2010

Three Indians named in MIT’s Technological Review

Sunday, August 29th, 2010

Three Indians named in MIT’s Technological Review

Three Indians have been named in Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s (MIT) prestigious annual ‘Technology Review’ list of top young innovators under the age of 35 “who exemplify the spirit of innovation in business and technology.”

Rikin Gandhi, 29, Ranveer Chandra, 34 and Indrani Medhi, 32 are in the ‘2010 TR35′ - list of 35 “outstanding men and women” compiled by Technology Review, an independent media company owned by MIT, that focuses on identifying emerging technologies and analysing their impact for leaders.

“This year’s winners have created innovations over a wide variety of fields, including energy, biomedicine, communications, IT, transportation and web.

“Their groundbreaking work is liberating patients from sleep clinics, shaping the rules for social networks and helping populations cope with crisis. The 2010 TR35 are transforming technology and tackling problems in a way that is likely to benefit society and business,sportsjerseyswholesale” editor in chief and publisher of Technology Review Jason Pontin said.

Since 1999, the editors of Technology Review have honoured young innovators whose inventions and research they find most exciting.

The TR35 is a list of technologists and scientists, all under the age of 35.

“Their work - spanning medicine, computing, communications, electronics, nanotechnology, and more - is changing our world,” Pontin added.

Gandhi is the founder of the nonprofit ‘Digital Green’ that focuses on educating farmers about farming techniques through locally produced videos, in which local farmers are featured.

“Gandhi demonstrated that for every dollar spent, the system persuaded seven times as many farmers to adopt new ideas as an existing programme of training and visits,” the Technology Review said.

He helped launch the programme as a 2006 project at Microsoft Research, India and spent six months testing various video schemes in villages in Karnataka before concluding that featuring local farmers was the key.

Villagers produce the videos using handheld camcorders; workers from partner nongovernmental organisations then check the quality of the videos and the accuracy of the advice before screening them in the villages with handheld projectors.

So far 500 videos have been made, but three times that number - which should reach four times as many villages - are currently planned.

Chandra of Microsoft Research worked on delivering high-speed wireless Internet connections over longer distances.

He made the Microsoft campus in Redmond, Washington his laboratory for the first large-scale network to demonstrate the potential of using white spaces to deliver broadband wireless as a solution to the problem that Wi-Fi uses frequencies that can’t carry a signal more than a few tens of meters.

“If such a system gains currency, all of us should be connected and better connected, and not just here in the US,” says Chandra.

Spectrum regulators from Singapore, India, Brazil and China have visited his prototype network to explore the potential for white-space signals to connect large rural areas with minimal infrastructure.Ed Hardy wholesale

Medhi focuses on “building interfaces for the illiterate”.

Based at Microsoft Research India’s Bangalore lab, she has conducted field research in India, South Africa and the Philippines to design text-free interfaces that could help illiterate and semi-literate people find jobs, get medical information, and use cell-phone-based banking services.

Computer icons differ from one culture to another, so Medhi used symbols, audio cues and cartoons that are specific to particular poor communities.Mbt shoes

Through a short video dramatisation, her target audience is shown how an application is supposed to work.

The 2010 TR35 were selected from more than 300 submissions by Technology Review editors in collaboration with a panel of judges from leading organisations such as Carnegie Mellon University, Hewlett-Packard, MIT, Stanford University, the University of California, Berkeley, and Yahoo Labs.

Cartoonist RK Laxman hospitalised

Sunday, August 29th, 2010

Cartoonist RK Laxman hospitalised

RK Laxman,GHD Pure White India’s greatest cartoonist and creator of the Common Man, has been admitted to hospital following a stroke in Pune.

Laxman’s work which spans over six decades chronicled India.

He is best known for his fearless lampooning of politicians, from Jawaharlal Nehru and Indira Gandhi during the repressive days of the Emergency, to Vajpayee and other leaders.5816 Style Women Boots

The 86-year-old cartoonist had suffered a stroke earlier also and was admitted to Sahyadri Hospital, where he suffered two more mild strokes affecting his right portion and speech.

The Magsaysay award winner had suffered a stroke six years ago which affected the left portion of his body.UGG 30th Anniversary He was doing fine since then and residing at his Pune residence.

Laxman has been honoured with the Pamda Vibhushan.

Dhoni loses top spot, Sehwag rises in ICC ODI rankings

Sunday, August 29th, 2010

Dhoni loses top spot, Sehwag rises in ICC ODI rankings

Indian skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni lost his number one spot but opening batsman Virender Sehwag gained eight places to return to the top-10 at eighth in the ICC ODI rankings issued on Sunday.CHI Camo Blue

India held on to the second spot in the team rankings despite losing the tri-series final to Sri Lanka last night.

Sri Lanka, sixth before the series, are just behind India, and in front of South Africa, who drop to fourth, when the ratings are calculated beyond the decimal point.CHI Pink Ceramic

New Zealand drop to sixth from fourth as Australia, at the top, and England, in fifth spot, remain unchanged.

In individual rankings, Tillakaratne Dilshan broke into the top five of the batting chart.

Dilshan’s match-winning effort of 110 in the final against India last night was enough to earn him a three-place boost in the rankings and he now sits in fourth position, level with Hashim Amla of South Africa.

Amla’s team-mate AB de Villiers has benefited from Dhoni’s slip with the 26-year-old from Pretoria taking over at the top of the rankings.

The other main mover upwards in the top 10 is Sehwag, who was declared Man-of-the-Series in Sri Lanka.

The hard-hitting opener was the series’ top-scorer with 268 at an average of 67 and that effort has moved him up eight places on the rankings to eighth place.

Sachin Tendulkar, who was rested from the tri-series, lost four places and now sits in 10th position. A player loses half a per cent of his rating for every ODI he misses.

In the list for bowlers, India pacer Praveen Kumar has gained five places to break into the top 10 for the first time in his career.

The 23-year-old took nine wickets in the Sri Lanka tri-series at an average of 23.GHD Kiss66 and now sits in 10th position in the ladder, level with Pakistan’s Shahid Afridi.

Older people play catch-up on Facebook Study

Sunday, August 29th, 2010

Older people play catch-up on Facebook Study

Social networking groups are no more an exclusive domain of teenagers or youngsters as it was a few years back, but now it is catering more for all those who are older but still young at heart.

The phenomenal growth of Facebook,GHD Black Twitter and other social networking sites in the past year has come in part because of a surge in adoption by older members, with a national poll released Friday providing a surprising new measure for how fast baby boomers and seniors are adopting online social networks to bridge generations and geography.

A new study from the Pew Internet and American Life Project says the number of social networking users ages 50 and older nearly doubled in the past year, continuing a trend of strong growth that was first spotted last year.

In fact, for adults 50 to 64 years old, the use of social networking sites have jumped by 88 per cent in the past year, the study found. For those 65 and older, it has doubled.

The younger generation remains the biggest users of Facebook and other sites.

But the report shows that seniors currently make up the fastest-growing group.

“It’s surprising to see just how fast they are growing,” said Mary Madden, senior research specialist and author of Pew’s study.

The Pew Centre points to several factors Instylerthat contribute to why facebook is no more for kids anymore.

Using Facebook to find old friends and colleagues isn’t unique to any one demographic, but Pew says roughly seven out of ten people have used social networks for this purpose.

Roughly half of adults ages 50 and over have been contacted by someone from their past through a social network.

As people retire or change careers, social networks can be a way to stay in touch or get support.

Pew notes that Internet users with chronic diseases are more likely to blog or participate in online discussions,CHI Camo Green and older folks are more likely to have these diseases.

Put those two factors together, and you’ve got a strong argument for social networking as a way to find communities of people with similar experiences.

Pew says older folks may use social networks to connect with their progeny, despite results that “can sometimes be messy”.

The group doesn’t provide hard data to support this claim, but it should seem like common sense to anyone whose parents use Facebook.

Pew doesn’t mention the prevalence of social games such as Farmville as a reason Facebook attracts older users, but it seems obvious when you look at the demographics of players.